Exhibition

The Eternal Network

Wed, Jan 29–Sun, Mar 1, 2020
Wed, Jan 29, 2020
11 am–8 pm
Thu, Jan 30, 2020
11 am–10 pm
Fri, Jan 31, 2020
11 am–8 pm
Sat, Feb 1, 2020
11 am–8 pm
Sun, Feb 2, 2020
11 am–8 pm
Mon, Feb 3, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Free admission
Wed, Feb 5, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Thu, Feb 6, 2020
12 noon–10 pm
Fri, Feb 7, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sat, Feb 8, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sun, Feb 9, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Mon, Feb 10, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Free admission
Wed, Feb 12, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Thu, Feb 13, 2020
12 noon–10 pm
Fri, Feb 14, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sat, Feb 15, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sun, Feb 16, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Mon, Feb 17, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Free admission
Wed, Feb 19, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Thu, Feb 20, 2020
12 noon–10 pm
Fri, Feb 21, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sat, Feb 22, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sun, Feb 23, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Mon, Feb 24, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Free admission
Wed, Feb 26, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Thu, Feb 27, 2020
12 noon–10 pm
Fri, Feb 28, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sat, Feb 29, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Sun, Mar 1, 2020
12 noon–7 pm
Opening hours:
Jan 29, 2019–Mar 1, 2020
Daily except Tue, 12–7pm, Thu, 12–10pm

Fee: 5€/3€
Mondays Free admission

Guided Tours every Sunday 3pm
3€ plus exhibition ticket
Short Tours every Monday 3pm

More about the guided tours and tickets: transmediale.de
transmediale 2020, © The Laboratory of Manuel Bürger

From a queer feminist wiki platform to a critical atlas of the Internet to a supercomputer that recommends absurd geo-engineering scenarios to overcome the climate crisis: The Eternal Network exhibition questions technological and social networks in the light of contemporary urgencies. How can the digital space be decolonized? How is information sharing conceivable beyond platform capitalism? How reliably can networks still provide answers to future models of sociality, technology and ecology today?

Based on Fluxus artist Robert Filliou’s 1960s concept of the Eternal Network, the exhibition presents a reference system with terms, quotes and images for the development of network cultures. Selected network culture projects from the 1990s to the present are presented in a series of revisions. While the idea of the Eternal Network anticipated new forms of exchange in an increasingly global world, these critical network cultures similarly speculated about cultural practices related to the new web infrastructure and post-globalized society. By connecting Filliou’s Eternal Network, critical network cultures and contemporary art, the exhibition closes the gap between the pre- and post-Internet eras. In view of network backlash, it examines the legacy of critical network cultures to find out whether and how they can continue to have emancipatory importance in the future.

With works by, among many others, Johanna Bruckner, Luiza Prado de O. Martins, GUO Cheng, Louise Drulhe and Bahar Noorizadeh